82 . lVe su et OO! ( es e ( u One of the last vestiges of real masculinity is the belt. Fine mellow leather. Gleaming brass. Sturdy fabrics and trimmings that conjure up paddock and woodland. Don't let them take it away from you! If your trousers are equipped with belt loops, you are in an enviable position to show off your Canterbury collection. If not, you might consider getting looped. 'I/us. Canterbury's exclusive Surcingle belt. Heavy imported English worsted equipage web in a host of colorful racing stripes. Saddle leather tab, sturdy brass harness buckle. $3.95. Write for name of store near you. <:) () anttrbu'11ßtlts I tb. 36 East 31st Street, New York City d It . f. " .':. ' 'I . < 1! I' : I . ! i J,,>: '. . 1 j 1 I_ < I ., 1 ; ,.., t.J,' :. " -=-___ ,-:-= ,..,_ . .. .. .. . . "".. , k-" t' I ' ..T- - - ,. . "'; - (- \ ] I 7T[ r- ' : ..........-.v w 1 .. <!: "':. ":":: -t .... :.., , I .( j 1 ., . i: '" .. -::( ..... "" -- ,'- . . f.> "' .'" -';" .,......AIlIIicI'r -.. ::::';'. '"""' %", "t u" :::.,. . -- , ; -- t-t -- i ........, <--- .... .J 1 ..<--- :, ,...., .. :.:" ( f. ":,': :træ f ';iit:. ":::=:!" .:.:. :.:.:". ;:;:;.:: ..::::::::;:. , ^^ ".... :.:..., . oM .... OJ#< # National Hat Week begins October 15 the Eagle $11.9 5 Other styles to 25.00 1lf#-...fíne hats for gentlemen Disney Hats, 589 Fifth Avenue l New York 17, No Y. mentioned was neither of these two." " I O bI " mpOSSI e. "She even said he was a friend of yours. Wait a moment. Perhaps it will come back to me." "But I don't want to know! That is all utterly unImportant, and besides, it is her husiness. It seems to me that what the two of us are doing here is highly uncivilized . . ." Here righteous indignation worked too well; the victim stared at him, then sat back with his eyes closed, and seemed about to faint. "Are you ill?" "No. You frightened me. For a mo- ment I thought she was here. You spoke in her voice, the words were hers, and you even looked like her. I\ily God! Ho can you do that " "I'm sorry, I was not aware of it. I t is true, I am often told I have a gift for imitating VOIces, and, as I happened to he thinking of her reaction to all this, h " per aps- "Never mind. You were rIght. I could not agree more. And I hope I have your word that this remains be- tween us." "But I gave it to you. Must I repeat it all the time?" "No, no, I'm sorry, but you don't know what she's like when she flies into " a temper. " D ' t I " on . "Oh, you do? Why? Was she ever like that wIth you?" "No, of course not, but I saw her- frequently, too. These tempers were never directed against me, I want you to understand, always against herself" "Against herself " "Against herself." "Not against me? " "No. Only agaInst herself." "How strange. I never knew she had a conscience." "Oh, she has, she most definitely has. And a very sensitive one " "How many things you know about my wife that I don't know." "Why, that is only natural. An out- sider at times-" "An outsider Tho is the outsider here ? You have been inside her bones." "Yes, but a stranger very often, like a confessor, who. 0 . It is an entirely dif- ferent kind of relationship. Body and soul cannot always he relinquished to- gether. One must be held back. Only in rare cases of great love, and a great love is rarer than a great violinist, a great o " paInter . . . "I know, I know. These are her words, or perhaps they are yours. But, to be quite sincere, she held back her body from me, too. She was incapable ---- "^' --